ICMCC

the international council on medical & care compunetics

science pages

19
March , 2010
Friday

How do healthcare consumers process and evaluate comparative healthcare information? A qualitative study using cognitive interviews.

Abstract

Background
To date, online public healthcare reports have not been effectively used by consumers. Therefore, we qualitatively examined how healthcare consumers process and evaluate comparative healthcare information on the Internet.

Methods
Using semi-structured cognitive interviews, interviewees (n=20) were asked to think aloud and answer questions, as they were prompted with three Dutch web pages providing comparative healthcare information.

Results
We identified twelve themes from consumers’ thoughts and evaluations. These themes were categorized under four important areas of interest: (1) a response to the design; (2) a response to the information content; (3) the use of the information, and (4) the purpose of the information.

Conclusions
Several barriers to an effective use of comparative healthcare information were identified, such as too much information and the ambiguity of terms presented on websites. Particularly important for future research is the question of how comparative healthcare information can be integrated with alternative information, such as patient reviews on the Internet. Furthermore, the readability of quality of care concepts is an issue that needs further attention, both from websites and communication experts.

Damman, Olga, Michelle Hendriks, Jany Rademakers, Diana Delnoij, and Peter Groenewegen. “How do healthcare consumers process and evaluate comparative healthcare information? A qualitative study using cognitive interviews..” BMC Public Health 9, no. 1 (November 20, 2009): 423.  

22 November 2009

Bibliographic Data

Title:

How do healthcare consumers process and evaluate comparative healthcare information? A qualitative study using cognitive interviews.

Author(s):

Damman, Olga; Hendriks, Michelle; Rademakers, Jany; Delnoij, Diana; Groenewegen, Peter

Journal

BMC Public Health, 9(1), pp. 423
(2009-11-20)

URL:

Full article

DOI:

10.1186/1471-2458-9-423

PMID:

19930564

Keywords:

, , , , ,

Citation:

Damman, Olga, Michelle Hendriks, Jany Rademakers, Diana Delnoij, and Peter Groenewegen. “How do healthcare consumers process and evaluate comparative healthcare information? A qualitative study using cognitive interviews..” BMC Public Health 9, no. 1 (November 20, 2009): 423.  

Other Publications

In ICMCC Database

All BMC Public Health articles (4).

Discussion